Conservationists Act to Stop Industrialization of the Thompson Divide

For Immediate Release

Conservationists Act to Stop Industrialization of the Thompson Divide

Group petitions for reversal of BLM decision that extends illegal oil and gas leases

DENVER, Colo. - Earthjustice, representing Wilderness Workshop, today filed an administrativeappeal seeking reversal of the April 9 Colorado Bureau of Land Management (BLM) decision that extended the lives of 25 oil and gas leases set to expire this year. These leases, which BLM admits were illegally sold and which have sat unused for ten years, are located in the heart of the Thompson Divide, a prized refuge of public lands in the White River National Forest.

The Thompson Divide covers more than 200,000 acres near Carbondale, Colorado, and includes no fewer than nine different roadless areas. The Divide consists primarily of mid-elevation forest lands that provide important habitat for a variety of wildlife and threatened plant species. The Divide is also an important local economic driver that supports outfitters and recreation companies, and is used for livestock grazing by ranchers.

During the Bush administration, however, BLM issued a series of oil and gas leases blanketing the Thompson Divide. Included in those sales were the 25 leases at issue in today’s appeal. Those 25 leases cover much of the Divide, including extensive portions of designated roadless areas. If these leases were drilled, the chemical spills, air and water pollution and industrialization from oil and gas development that have scarred much of western Colorado over the last decade would spread into the heart of the Divide.

“Sometimes BLM needs to just say no to the oil and gas industry,” said Michael Freeman, an attorney with Earthjustice. “If we can’t keep energy development out of a place like the Thompson Divide, what part of Colorado is safe? We can meet our energy needs in responsible fashion without destroying our most important public lands.”

The administrative appeal filed today challenges BLM’s decision to extend the life of the leases—and the likelihood that they will be drilled. The 25 leases were issued in 2003 and fortunately sat undeveloped for their entire ten-year life. As a result, the leases are due to expire this year according to their own terms.

Earlier in 2013, however, the two companies holding the leases asked BLM to extend the lives of the leases by suspending them. Suspension stops the 10-year clock, artificially extending the period that the companies may hold the leases.

Thousands of citizens and local governments fiercely opposed the energy companies’ request and asked BLM to let the leases expire. Doing so would simply hold the companies to the terms they agreed to when they purchased the leases. Instead, BLM on April 9 granted the suspension requests. In suspending the leases, BLM failed to follow federal law or its own rules governing lease suspensions.

“Suspending the leases was wrong,” said Peter Hart of Wilderness Workshop. “BLM bailed out these two companies by extending leases that it admits were issued in violation of the law and that hadn’t been diligently developed. The decision doesn't comply with agency regulations, snubs the existing values and uses in the Divide, and ignores the will of local communities and the thousands of people from around the nation who asked BLM to let the illegal leases expire.”

When considering the suspension request, BLM found that the leases were sold in violation of the National Environmental Policy Act. Moreover, while most of the leases lie in Forest Service roadless areas, they lack any express stipulations protecting these pristine lands.

Allowing the leases to expire would have corrected the errors the agency made when issuing them in 2003. Instead, by extending the leases until April 2014, BLM has decided to keep the leases alive—and extend the threat of drilling—for another year. Wilderness Workshop is now asking the BLM Colorado State Director to overturn the suspensions so that the leases will expire.

“BLM should hold the energy companies to the terms of their lease contracts,” said Freeman. “It’s the right thing to do legally, and it’s the right result for the Thompson Divide.”

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Further

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